Viagra effects. What Happens When a Man First Takes a Viagra Pill?
What Happens When a Man First Takes a Viagra Pill?
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Absolutely nothing. Pfizer Inc., the maker of Viagra,
long has said the drug isn't an aphrodisiac, but many men who take it
still expect to feel something.
They don't. Among several men interviewed who have used the drug, not
one of them experienced any feeling or sensation after taking the pill.
The nothingness is so intense that the most common reaction is a slight
panic that the drug isn't going to work.
"That was my worst fear, that it wasn't going to do anything,"
says Steve Brykman of Los Angeles, who tried Viagra
once nine months ago, when he believed job and financial stresses were
interfering with his sex life. After taking the pill, "there was
nothing at all," says Mr. Brykman, 33 years old. "I just felt
completely normal."
Though you may not feel anything, things are happening in the body. As
the pill moves into the bloodstream, it starts to block an enzyme called
PDE-5. Blocking the enzyme eventually increases blood flow to areas where
PDE-5 is most heavily concentrated -- the penis, nose and skin. Diminished
blood flow to the penis is the cause of most erectile-dysfunction problems.
So How Do You Get It to Start Working?
Viagra
gets the blood flowing, but your brain has to be in the mood as well.
"The biggest misperception is that it changes your psychology and
makes you want sex," claims to document the experiences of real people
who take Viagra.
"But if you're sitting talking to Grandma and you pop a Viagra,
unless you have issues, nothing's going to happen."
Viagra
takes about 30 minutes to kick in. Men who don't normally have problems,
or who have only mild dysfunction, say it takes only a minor stimulus
-- such as the brush of a hand that wouldn't cause arousal under normal
circumstances -- to trigger an erection.
For men who have serious erectile
dysfunction, getting things going may still require extra effort,
partly because of nervousness or embarrassment about unsuccessful past
attempts at intercourse.
Because Viagra
doesn't increase desire, it's not prescribed for men with desire disorders,
such as a low sex drive. However, if the man has lost interest in sex
because he has had problems with erections in the past, Viagra
may help.
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Does Taking Viagra
Make a Man More Virile?
You
want to try if Viagra works for you? CLICK HERE ...
It might. A surprising new area of research is whether taking a small dose
of Viagra
every night works as a preventative to stave off impotence, just as people can
take an aspirin a day to prevent heart attack.
Though you wouldn't think you'd get much out of Viagra
while you're sleeping, it turns out that nighttime erections -- most men get
three or four every night -- are crucial to maintaining potency. Because most
men don't have several erections during the day, the nocturnal erection, which
allows blood and oxygen to flow to the genitals, is nature's way of keeping
the penis in working order. The theory is that anything that increases the intensity
and duration of nighttime erections is good for long-term potency.
But don't you need a sexual stimulus for Viagra
to work? You do, and the likely trigger for nighttime erections, rapid-eye-movement
sleep, is said to be the strongest sexual stimulus a man can experience. The
brain shuts down all other activity to the penis and the level of adrenaline,
which interferes with erections, plummets.
An Italian study of 44 men gave half the men 50 milligrams of Viagra
before they went to sleep. The men averaged 39 years of age and didn't have
erectile dysfunction. Those who took Viagra
had significantly longer and more rigid nighttime erections than the men taking
a placebo.
Irwin Goldstein, a noted Boston urologist, says about 400 of his patients are
using 25 mg of Viagra
each night as a preventative measure. "Men say, 'I'm potent. I don't want
to become impotent. Is there something I can do?' " says Dr. Goldstein.
"It's a very simple strategy for preserving sexual health."
But while it makes sense in theory, whether nighttime Viagra
use can prevent impotence is far from proven. Pfizer says it's studying whether
nighttime Viagra use can help improve sexual function in patients who have had
prostate surgery but it won't present the results until early next year.
Meanwhile, it's worth noting that the best way to prevent impotence is
to keep your veins from clogging up in the first place. Don't smoke, eat
healthy foods, lose weight and lower your cholesterol.
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